Francesca R
Girl
The relationship with the EU has edged in front as the number one voter issue. (This is not a good thing really).The relevant point is austerity : Yay or Nay, and if Yay how much?
The relationship with the EU has edged in front as the number one voter issue. (This is not a good thing really).The relevant point is austerity : Yay or Nay, and if Yay how much?
You mean, it's one of these issues where public opinion in England and Scotland is not the same, by some measures? Such issues are indeed dangerous in the opinion of Unionists.The relationship with the EU has edged in front as the number one voter issue. (This is not a good thing really).
The source is a yougov survey of the top three issues on voters' minds stretching back over the last government. Immigration/EU has been top since some time in 2014. It is nationwide IIRC.You mean, it's one of these issues where public opinion in England and Scotland is not the same, by some measures? Such issues are indeed dangerous in the opinion of Unionists.
Not many. Most decisions of even low national significance have to go through the council of ministers which means every head of government has a veto. The view you express is largely trumped up fiction.The problem with the European Union is that it makes decisions affecting the United Kingdom and indeed any member country without it actually being held to account for them.
Frankly, I don't see the hypocrisy. As long as the Union exists, laws are made which affect all citizens of the Union, including citizens in Scotland. What's wrong with representing the interests of their constituents in Westminster? I note that the SNP moreover has pledged not to vote on laws that don't affect Scotland.In a fair number of posts you have failed to show that you understand that the Scots Nats primary interest is in breaking up the very nation in whose parliament they are standing for election. A party which wants to dissolve the union should have no part in governing the union, IMHO of course. Have representation by all means, because that is democratic, but to have actual hands on the controls? Uh uh...........that's gross hypocrisy.
Just that fact alone? I have a bit more faith that voters judge parties on the actual policies they implement.It's pointless telling me to deal with it and so on. I am simply pointing out that a minority Labour government propped up by a nationally-tiny anti-union party is going to render Labour as damaged goods in the eyes of millions of English voters. In doing that, I am making a prediction, not a complaint.
Immigration and membership of the EU are not the toxic issues in Scotland that they seem to be in England.The source is a yougov survey of the top three issues on voters' minds stretching back over the last government. Immigration/EU has been top since some time in 2014. It is nationwide IIRC.
If the people of Iceland demand a referendum on rejoining Denmark, and the Icelandic government unreasonably resists this popular demand; I will be on the side of the people. Now say that again with Norway and Sweden, Ireland and the United Kingdom. The truth is that once independence has been achieved, it is rare that there is a popular demand to reverse it. But if there were, that would be perfectly democratic.
Here is the current state of the polls, from the BBC's poll of polls:
Conservative 34% +0
Labour 34% +0
UKIP 13% +0
Liberal Democrats 8% +0
Green 5% +0
Others 6% +0
"Others" includes the Nationalist parties of Scotland, NI, and Wales. It would seem preposterous beyond words that these folk, bottom of the heap (none of them individually beating the Greens, and collectively only 1 percentage point ahead of the Greens), could actually be involved in power in any way, shape or form. That would be a gross perversion of democracy, and would make so many people so angry that I repeat my earlier assertion: years in the political wilderness awaits for any party that relied on them to take power.
It is free migration that is the single issue that many people don't like. Some of us love it though.
Yes, and I don't think England wants Ireland back.Reunification would also have to be the choice of both parties.
Some people only like free movement when it benefits them personally. Wasn't there a ridiculous poll a few months back that showed a majority favouring free movement for Brits, but also a majority thinking other EU citizens should not have the right to come to the UK?
Yes, and I don't think England wants Ireland back.
There won't be one. The Murdoch press, the Torygraph, the Express and the Daily Mail would make sure of that. It'd be a circus.There needs to be a genuine debate in this country about member ship of the European Union so that the public can then make an informed choice if they are required to in two years time.
Not in the steadfastly ignorant.Ignorance can be readily rectified ...
Hence the persistence of ignorance.... but prejudice and discrimination are not so easily overcome for even when knowledge is presented it can have zero effect on making informed choices.
The unconditional vote is the problem. Universal suffrage guarantees a largely uninformed electorate. It sounds great but it's actually a poison pill.For sadly being in possession of an open mind is not conditional on being allowed to vote
I don't really get the anti EU argument. In 2015 in western Europe there is little chance of any one nation breaking away from the Eu having long term economic success..
On a last note while I know the EU does not have sole credit peace has reigned in north western Europe for 70 years.
No NATO like the soviet bloc engaged in the insane process of building up enough nuclear weapons to return civilisation back to the neolithic-perhaps wipe humanity out completely. I think we can safely say that a nuclear war(or mutually assured destruction-seriously that's what its actually called) was avoided in spite of NATO and the Warsaw pact and their insane nuclear arms race ,not because of them.